three measures of rice grain owed by Wet Eyesâ family in Bak Chuen village. I have found an excellent prescription for Mumâs back pain and will send some with someone in a few days. I send you my best wishes for a peaceful winter,
Your husband, Red Hair, the nineteenth day of the first month, 1880, Victoria, Canada
Ah-Fat finished writing, sealed the letter and threw down the pen. He put his hand to his mouth and gave an enormous yawn. The storekeeper, Ah-Sing, brought him some tea. âDrink a nice bowl of tea, Ah-Fat,â he said. âAnd use the rest of the ink to write a letter for me too. Itâs been two months since I got my old mumâs letter, and I havenât replied.â But Ah-Fat flung himself dejectedly down on the bed board without taking off his clothes. âAsk me another day,â he said. âIâm sleepy.â Red Hair swore at the boy as he gathered up the ink stone, quill and paper. âYou think you can put on airs just because you know a few characters!â But before the words were out of his mouth, Ah-Fat was asleep and snoring. They all sighed. They were not surprised he was tired: he had left at five oâclock in the morning and had only just got back. He had not yet bought a pair of shoes and the sores on his feet were so deep, you could see the bone through them.
The oil lamp was extinguished and the men lay down. But they could not sleep, and a desultory conversation started up. Someone said that a few days ago a kwai mui, a young White woman, had gone into the opium den at one end of Fan Tan Alley, the street of gambling dens. She was dressed in black, with a black hat and black skirt, and was such a fine-looking woman that she gave the owner a real scare. He had no idea how to address her and could scarcely get a word out. To his surprise, she knew exactly what she was doing. She lay down on the smokersâ couch and, without waiting for anyone to attend her, faced the opium lamp, held the pipe in the palm of one hand and the bodkin in the other, let the opium bubble up, scooped it into a wad, plunged it into the eyehole in the pipe bowl and, when she had finished smoking, rose and left. She came again the next day too. It went on day after day: she came at the same time, smoked a pipe and left. Apparently, a reporter went with her and wrote an article as big as a window and published it in a Gold Mountain English-language newspaper. The men tutted in astonishment: âFind out what time she goes and weâll go and watch how this kwai mui does it.â Then someone else said Ah-Chow from the lodging house had told him that young Chungâs case had come to court. He had been sentenced to a month in jail and fined thirty dollars. Any Chinese who went to jail had their pigtails cut off but Chung had clung to the pillars outside the courtroom and refused to go at any price.One of his teeth had even been knocked out. Young Chung was from San Wui, and sold tobacco, candies and melon seeds in front of the tea house in Fan Tan Alley. One day, he let off a firecracker and a horse belonging to a yeung fan reared and went down in the street. Chung was taken to court.
They all sighed. âDoes the Emperor of China know how badly weâre being treated?â said one. âWhat the hell use would it be if he did know?â someone else responded. âChinese law has nothing to do with Gold Mountain law. Besides, even if he did know, and leapt on his horse and took a ship, it would take him months to get to Gold Mountain. And young Chung will have had his pigtails cut off long before that. He canât wait till the Emperor arrives, can he?â âI heard from Ah-Chow,â said Red Hair, âthat Imperial Minister Li Hongzhang asked some smartass to make something called a telegram, which only took a few hours to get from the Empire of China to Gold Mountain.â âDid it have long legs or long wings? How did it fly faster than a